Problem: A crisis is replete with paradoxes. It has both danger and opportunity, as well as a need for fast responses-and yet there are no quick fixes. It is universal, yet idiosyncratic. How can this be true? Consider a crisis that could have occurred in a client's distant past. The emphasis should be not so much on the crisis but on the paradoxes it presented. Looking back on the crisis, how does it now appear different from what it was immediately after it happened? Need Assignment Help?